Another 33 jobs in security, hospital radiology, laundry and the Department of Social Services' Managed Care Unit would be outsourced and the county workers laid off. An additional 41 jobs across departments would also be cut.

Sheriff Louis Falco has blasted the cuts and says due to civil service bumping rights, they will decimate the entire police division, including the bomb squad, arson unit and other specialties.

Paul Trader, chairman of the Institute for Nonprofits at the Cornell Cooperative Extension of Rockland, said the organizations have a minimum economic impact of $1 billion on the county annually.

He also said the work of the nonprofits prevents incarceration and hospitalizations, among other benefits, and that the organizations employ 9,000 people in the county.

Cutting the nonprofits, which use every $1 in county funding to generate an additional $3 from sources outside Rockland, will have a ripple effect on vital services and the local economy, Trader said.

Day cited a report by a former NYPD top cop as backup for his proposed cuts, but the report calls for bolstering the Road Patrol, not cutting it. It does call for the elimination of the Mounted Patrol.

Day also said he wants to have a county department review all nonprofits to help rank them based on the type of service they provided — health, social services, recreational, cultural and so forth.

His funding and job cuts were made at the last minute after he became aware he needed to set $10 million aside in the 2015 budget for additional deficit reduction.

Rockland nonprofit organizations will hold a 6 p.m. rally as they seek to have funding restored in the 2015 county budget. The County Legislature will hold a 7 p.m. hearing on the budget at the Allison-Parris County Office Building, 11 New Hempstead Road in New City.